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Sunrise House — a rural setting for healing
by Lise Greene |
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Tiffany Mansella and Annette Curving care for kids while their mothers are in the program.
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Lafayette - Sunrise House is an addiction
treatment center based on the principles of 12-step recovery as well as
medical and social research.
These principles include treating
patients with respect, compassion, and kindness in a structured
environment that encourages self-discipline … and hope.
The facility can serve 108 in-house patients:
15 in the detoxification unit (where all newcomers spend the first
week) and, in the longer-care units, 33 adult women, 44 adult men, and
16 mothers with their preschool children. There are special programs
for the patients’ family members and significant others, as well as an
intensive outpatient department for adults.
No one is turned
away for financial reasons. Support is available when needed through
the state, the county, insurance, and various assistance programs.
Life at Sunrise House
Patients
are free to take advantage of the beautiful park-like surroundings. As
it operates now, Sunrise House has no religious affiliation, but the
complex’s former life as a monastery is evidenced by the serenity of
the cloistered walkways connecting the buildings.
In the center
is an open courtyard with a fountain and shrubbery. Another remnant of
monastic days is the dining hall, where murals still grace the upper
walls and chandeliers hang from the high ceiling.
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The
monks’ “cells” have been converted to sleeping quarters for the
patients, usually accommodating two to a room. Each room contains basic
furniture and a sink. Larger areas serve as lounges and meeting rooms
for individual and group therapy.
Newcomers to the residential
program spend up to a week in detoxification. They are assessed and
treated by the medical staff, which includes doctors and nurses. In
addition, they have individual counseling as well as group sessions
with other patients who are battling a similar addiction, whether it is
to alcohol or various types of drugs. Male and female patients are
housed on different floors and segregated during group counseling and
meals. Counselors work with patients of the same gender.
The
next step is a rehabilitation program that takes up to a month to
complete. During counseling, patients become educated about addiction
and identify their personal goals and objectives. They enjoy a regular
schedule of rising, meeting, eating, and retiring. There are
opportunities for them to explore their creativity with artwork or
crafts, and free time for recreation and relaxation. All activities are
geared toward learning how to function in a productive way, leaving the
dysfunctional lifestyle behind.
Sunrise House offers about a
dozen specialized treatment tracks to help each patient feel
comfortable in a group of peers. There is a track for youthful addicts
from about 18 to 25 years old. Another group is all female. There are
tracks limited to people who have abused only alcohol or only drugs.
Others provide increased opportunities for talking. On the other hand,
the art therapy track is often selected by patients who are shy about
talking; as the patient draws on paper, the therapist “draws out” the
patient.
“Mother and Me” program
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About
three years ago, Sunrise House established a program called “Mother and
Me” (M&M) for women who are addicted or at high risk for relapse
during pregnancy or their children’s infancy. This program requires a
referral from the state’s Division of Youth and Family Services (DYFS)
and is operated in partnership with the Division of Addiction Services.
“Addiction
and abuse are closely intertwined,” said Dr. Philip Horowitz, chief
executive officer of Sunrise House. More than one-third of child abuse
and neglect cases confirmed by DYFS involve at least one parent with a
known substance abuse problem, he added.
The goal of the M&M
program is to reunite women with their children. Treatment focuses on
the patient’s chemical dependency and rehabilitation. For many
patients, said Chief Operating Officer George Dominguez, the program is
more “habilitation” than rehabilitation, because they are learning
effective life skills for the first time.
Women who wish to
enter M&M go through the same initial month-long detoxification and
rehabilitation program as other patients. They share the chore of
assessing their suitability for M&M with the staff. A high
percentage of those who want the program are accepted. The mothers then
move into their own rooms in a separate wing of the facility, where up
to two of their children (infant through age four) join them, if
feasible. Cribs are set up in the mothers’ room for infants, and
toddlers sleep in a room across the hall.
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The
children are in an on-site day care center or playroom while their
mothers are in counseling and education sessions. The primary treatment
focus is drug and alcohol education and relapse prevention. The women
also learn a host of skills for parenting, nutrition, assertiveness,
employment, domestic violence prevention, birth control, psychological
and physical wellness, and daily living. If needed, they are taught
basic literacy skills and can take classes toward earning a high school
equivalency diploma. Nicotine education and replacement is mandatory.
After
six to nine months, M&M graduates have the option of moving with
their children into a halfway home maintained by Sunrise House in
Franklin. If they choose to live in their own apartment, they receive
intensive outpatient counseling.
Kieran Ayre, chief clinical
officer, reported that the M&M program is highly successful.
Horowitz discussed two success stories. One participant was an
aggressive woman whose six children had been removed by DYFS. After
nine months at Sunrise House, during which time the two youngest were
reunited with her, the woman was prepared to live independently. Now,
three years later, she is a college student. The two children are still
with her, and she has not experienced any relapse. The second woman is
currently an intern at a law firm, and will be recommended by Sunrise
House staff as she applies to law school.
Help is always needed
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In addition to
continuing its current programs, Sunrise House plans to expand its
detoxification unit. This will include both modernizing the physical
facility and augmenting the clinical services. Sunrise House is one of
the few non-hospital-based detox programs remaining in the state, and
improving its services will ensure treatment to more patients.
Fundraisers are being held to help with the expansion costs.
As
a nonprofit organization, Sunrise House welcomes financial
contributions from the public, including donations to a specific
program (such as Mother and Me) or in memory of a loved one. To make a
donation, contact Warrie Howell, chief development officer, at
973-383-6300 ext. 106.
In addition to contributions by check or
credit card, Internet users can donate by establishing GoodSearch as
their search engine and designating Sunrise House as their beneficiary
from among the thousands of nonprofits listed (see www.goodsearch.com).
For each search, a penny will be donated to the designated charity. For
more information about Sunrise House, call 973-383-6300 or visit www.sunrisehouse.com.
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